About Sarah Yates
Sarah Yates Reddy built a courtroom routine out of steady, early steps. She moved from small-firm clerkship to partner in just a few years. The trajectory says something about how she approaches her work: methodical, practical and focused on results rather than fanfare.
She earned a Bachelor of Arts from Westminster College in 2008, where she studied pre-law political science, classics and Latin. After that she went to the University of Tulsa College of Law and received her J.D. in 2011. While at Tulsa she completed coursework in Native American law, a subject that has informed a portion of her later practice.
Her legal career began in a traditional training ground. In 2008 she clerked at Jarboe & Stoermer, P.C., doing research and assisting on litigation matters. That experience led to an associate role in 2011 at Fenton, Fenton, Smith, Reneau & Moon, where she handled a mix of civil litigation tasks and courtroom preparations. By 2012 she had co-founded Reddy & Feldhake, PC and took on the responsibilities of partner. She has held that role since, managing matters and mentoring younger lawyers in the firm.
On the procedural side, Reddy is admitted to practice in Oklahoma and in federal forums. She is authorized to appear before the Tenth Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court. She joined the American Bar Association and the Federal Bar Association in 2011 and remains active in both organizations. Those memberships have kept her connected to developments in appellate procedure and federal practice.
Colleagues describe her as deliberate in litigation planning. She prepares written work carefully and values courtroom readiness. Her background in classics and Latin feeds a precise approach to legal writing. The Native American law coursework at Tulsa also factors into how she assesses cases that touch on tribal issues and federal jurisdiction.
At Reddy & Feldhake, PC, she handles matters that arise in both state and federal courts. She is involved in appellate filings and litigation strategy, and she works on cases that require an understanding of tribal law and federal procedure. She continues to practice at the firm, concentrating on litigation in state and federal courts and work involving Native American law.